Wrestling Match Between the Typhoon and the Stone Giant
Wrestling in the leading sport in Japan. In the big
cities the wrestling ground is square and surrounded by two roped galleries.
Women occupy the upper tier. The ring is about twenty feet in diameter
and raised about two feet from the ground floor. It is strewn with sand
and surrounded by a double embankment of bags of straw. It is covered by
a roof decorated with lanterns and flags and supported by four slanting
red pillars.
A contest between Typhoon and the Stone Giant in
Yokohama was witnessed recently by a correspondent of the Seattle Post-Intelligencer.
The wrestlers were accompanied by friends and several coolies carrying
lacquer boxes containing the costumes for the ring and toilet articles.
They are famous wrestlers and were dressed like noblemen. While undressing
they talked together in a friendly manner, smoked cigars and drank imported
beer. The ring costume considered of large silk handkerchiefs with frilled
edges tied around the loins. They were immense fellows - solid, broad and
muscular, but not tall. The Typhoon was about 4 feet and 7 inches in height
and the Stone Giant was a little more than 5 feet. Both had straight, thick,
jet black hair, dressed in the old fashioned style, and the barber had
great difficulty in fixing the hair firmly at the nape of the neck. When
noblemen, who patronize them, entered the dressing room they jumped up,
making the joints crack and stretching their limbs.
At the sound of a drum on the tower at the entrance
to the grounds the wrestlers put on velvet aprons and several belts, tokens
of former victories. With pendent arms, proceeded by the four judges and
followed by a file of wrestlers and several attendants, they entered the
inclosure and marched around. The spectators had reached a high pitch of
excitement. They shouted loudly, clapped their hands and rapped on the
balustrades with their fans. After the parade, all seated themselves around
the ring, the opponents facing each other. Each of the judges stepped to
one of the poles and squatted down. The attendants placed a bucked of water
and a vessel containing salt on the top of the embankment. The wrestlers
took off their aprons and belts, jumped into the ring and struck many athletic
attitudes that caused applause and enlivened the betting.
Refreshing themselves with a drink of water and
pinch of salt, they squatted on the sand, faced each other as a kind of
salutation, and then arose with their arms extended and their fingers bent
to catch hold of each other. Then they began to stamp the ground and repeatedly
rushed at each other to get a firm grip. Stone Giant's only endeavor during
the whole fight seemed to be to press down his opponent by his weight and
so push him out of the ring. But the dark olive body of the Typhoon always
managed to struggle away from from the lump of flesh that threatened to
crush him, and he tried to improve his grip at even opportunity. At last
he seized his opponent by the leg and made him hop backward. The spectators
roared with laughter. They had got near the embankment. Stone Giant once
more threw himself on the dwarf, as he called him, angrily, and almost
succeeded in bouncing him over the line. The two judges nearest them stood
at the line, for as soon as one stepped over it the match was over.
Typhoon became enraged, but all his twisting, wriggling,
pushing and other tricks were of no avail against 230 pounds. So they fought
for twenty, thirty, forty minutes. Typhoon was getting tired. Several timed
he was pressed to the ground and it became more and more difficult to hold
each other, as they perspired freely. During all this time their movements
had looked somewhat theatrical; it seemed as if they had learned to pose
for and exaggerate every situation of the combat. But now they were in
dead earnest, and they wished to come to a close. For an instant Stone
Giant lost his foothold, and Typhoon, getting all his strength together,
lifted him up from the earth and hurled him over the embankment. It was
a marvelous acrobatic feat.
The judges rose and the manager pronounced Typhoon
to be the victor. The spectators got up from their seats, shouted and threw
presents into the ring. He bowed and bowed again, putting both hands
on his knees. Many scraps of paper came flying down from the tiers, in
which the presents of sums of money were announced and the addresses where
he could send for them. Attendants picked them up and Typhoon marched off
with his suite. - Seattle Post-Intelligencer.